Converted Adivasis, in collusion with handful of bigoted Dalit activists (not 
Dalits) are trying to create an impression that Sangh Parivar is anti-tribal 
and anti-Dalit.

There will not be any buyers of such theories.

Salwa Judam is anti-Naxlite. in Orissa, Tribal Christians, in collusion with 
Naxlites murdered Swamiji so, if Salwa Judam kills those Tribal Christians 
(friends of Naxlites), I don't see any problem at all.

When a Gold Medalist Doctor can be booked for alleged Naxlite supporter, why 
can't there be few bad tribals, who support Naxlites.

-Manoj Padhi




Dr Binayak Sen has been in prison for 22 months, arrested under one of India’s 
most draconian laws, the Chattisgarh Special Public Security Act. This Act has 
such a vague, diffused definition of ‘Unlawful Activity’ that it renders every 
person guilty unless he or she can prove their innocence. Dr Sen’s bail 
application was dismissed twice, both times at the very outset, by the High 
Court of Chattisgarh and by the Supreme Court of India. On neither occasion was 
there a discussion on the merits of the case. On the 2nd of December 2008 the 
High Court of Chattisgarh once again turned down his bail application, without 
a discussion on the merits of the case, saying that there had been no change in 
circumstances.

But there has been a change in circumstances. To begin with, the charge-sheet 
has been filed. 64 witnesses have been examined by the prosecution. Not one of 
them has provided legally admissible evidence to support the accusations in the 
charge-sheet. Even the jail officials, the Superintendent and the Jailer, who 
were called as witnesses by the Prosecution, have ruled out the possibility of 
Dr Sen being a carrier of letters given to him by Narayan Sanyal (said to be a 
senior Maoist leader) who is a high security prisoner in Raipur Jail. (It 
should be mentioned here that Narayan Sanyal has a medical condition which 
requires surgical intervention from time to time, which is why the jail 
authorities permitted Dr Sen to visit him regularly.)

That Dr Sen should continue to be in prison when the case against him has 
almost completely fallen through says a great deal about the very grave 
situation in Chattisgarh today. There is a civil war in this state. Hundreds 
are being killed and imprisoned. Hundreds of thousands of the poorest of the 
poor are hiding in the forests, fearing for their lives. They have no access to 
food, to markets, to schools or healthcare. The thousands who have been moved 
into the camps of the government-backed peoples’ militia, the Salwa Judum, are 
also trapped in sordid encampments, which have to be guarded by armed police. 
Hatred, violence and brutality is being cynically spread, pitting the poor 
against the poorest.

There is very little doubt that Dr Sen is in prison because he spoke out 
against this policy of the State Government, because he opposed the formation 
of the Salwa Judum. His incarceration is meant to silence dissent, and 
criminalize democratic space. It is meant to create a wall of silence around 
the civil war in Chattisgarh. It is meant to absorb all our attention so that 
the stories of the hundreds of other nameless, faceless people - ­those without 
lawyers, without the attention of journalists - who are starving and dying in 
the forests, go unnoticed and unrecorded.

Tomorrow is World Health Day. Dr Binayak Sen spent the best part of his life 
working among the poorest people in India, who live far away from the 
government’s attentions, with no access to clinics, hospitals, doctors or 
medicines. He has saved thousands from certain death from malaria, diarrhea, 
and other easily treatable illnesses. And yet, he is the one in jail, while 
those who boast openly about mass murder are free to go about their business, 
and even stand for elections.

What does this say about us? About who we are and where we’re going?

Arundhati Roy 

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